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Cultural collaboration gives Ikea shoppers a glimpse inside a Mi'kmaw home

Acollaboration betweena Mi'kmaw educator and the multinational furniture store Ikea is giving shoppers aglimpse inside a modernMi'kmaw home.

Mi'kmaw educator says showroom an opportunity for 'understanding of who we are'

John R. Sylliboy, of Eskasoni and Millbrook First Nations, says he's giving Ikea shoppers a glimpse into a Mi'kmaw family home 'to open people's minds to understand who we are as Mi'kmaq.' (Nic Meloney/CBC)

Acollaboration betweena Mi'kmaw educator and the multinational furniture store Ikea is giving shoppers aglimpse inside a modernMi'kmaw home.

John R. Sylliboy, an educatorof Eskasoni and Millbrook First Nations in Nova Scotia, collaborated with staff at the Ikea location near Halifax to decorate a section of the showroom with items that represent Mi'kmaw traditional territory and national pride.

"I think what we try to do with the showroom is capture a moment of time in a [Mi'kmaw]family," said Sylliboy.

"It was an opportunity to take a time and space and integrate it into a contemporary understanding of who we are, and also expand on ...how important it is to have space, be recognized and acknowledge the First Peoples here."

'It wasn't . . .how many sofas we can sell by doing this project.It was how many lives can we touch?' says David Duplisea of Ikea Halifax, left, who first proposed the idea of the Mi'kmaw collaboration. (Nic Meloney/CBC)

Sylliboy said staff at the store workedwith himover six months.

"We turned it into a proactive way of approach rather than becoming defensive and saying, 'OK, they just want to use our images and symbols to sell products,'" he said.

Sylliboy sourced items like basketry and otherartwork, traditional medicines and photos directly from community members and his family. His nieceTehya Millieacontributed her fancy shawl regalia, which is locked in a glass case.

"It makes me really happy," Milliea said.

"I feel like when anyone thinks about [First Nations] people as a whole, they're like, 'Oh, those ones that used to live in teepees.' We live normally. We don't still live in teepees."

The Ikea showroom is filled with items and symbols that represent a multigenerational Mi'kmaw home, like basketry, medicines and luskinikn (bread). (Nic Meloney/CBC)

David Duplisea, commercial activity manager at the Ikea Halifax location,proposed thecollaboration with Sylliboyafter anIkea in Edmonton launched a similar initiative.

"We knew it would take a lot of time; we knew there would be a lot of hard conversations to have," said Duplisea.

"It wasn't necessarily a quantitative [question of] how many sofas we can sell by doing this project.It was how many lives can we touch?"

Duplisea said he's gratefulto Sylliboy and the Mi'kmaw community for the "reflection and learning" given toIkea staff members.

"The final results are more than overwhelming. We've had customers walk through and get rather emotional. We've had co-workers walk through. I've shed tears through this process."

Take a look inside the Mi'kmaw showroom at Ikea:

Educator takes Halifax Ikea shoppers inside a Mi'kmaw home

3 years ago
Duration 3:22
A collaboration between a Mi'kmaw educator and the multinational furniture store Ikea is giving shoppers a glimpse inside a modern Mi'kmaw home.

The display is expected to remain in the showroom for up to nine months. Sylliboy said he's hoping Ikea will continue to incorporate Nova Scotia's many diverse communities.

"We have allies and all other kinds of treaty people here as well," he said.

"For example, AfricanNova Scotians, Gaelic cultures. We have people who are Acadian,and all kinds of people that we can celebrate in these rooms."